Chief Longwind Of The North
Certified/Certifiable
This recipe is new for me, though I have to imagine that others have made similar dishes.
I had some left over, cooked, whole-wheat lasagna noodles in the freezer and needed something to do with them. I didn't want traditional lasagna, rich with cheeses, herbs, tomatoes, etc. So I put a bit of EVOO in the bottom of a square caserole dish. I covered the bottom with a single layer of noodles. I then put a layer of thinly sliced fresh mushrooms over the noodles. The mushrooms were followed by thinly sliced raw chicken, and a sprinkling of chicken soup base and sage. Dust it with cornstarch. Lay down more noodels,, mushrooms, and chicken. Again season an dust. repeat until the caserole dish is filled. Por in about 14 oz. of good chicken stock, cover, and bake at 425 for 40 minutes.
I believe this would have come out even better had I included fresh baby peas, some diced carrot, and onion slices. But it was very good the way I made it. It had a rich gravy, thickend by the cornstarch, with great chicken and herb flavor. The noodles were well flavored as well, absorbing some of the chicken flavor from the gravy. All in all, it was an unqualified success.
Let me know if any of you has a similar, or better recipe, maybe adding some grated parmesan or something.
Seeeeeya; Goodweed of the North
I had some left over, cooked, whole-wheat lasagna noodles in the freezer and needed something to do with them. I didn't want traditional lasagna, rich with cheeses, herbs, tomatoes, etc. So I put a bit of EVOO in the bottom of a square caserole dish. I covered the bottom with a single layer of noodles. I then put a layer of thinly sliced fresh mushrooms over the noodles. The mushrooms were followed by thinly sliced raw chicken, and a sprinkling of chicken soup base and sage. Dust it with cornstarch. Lay down more noodels,, mushrooms, and chicken. Again season an dust. repeat until the caserole dish is filled. Por in about 14 oz. of good chicken stock, cover, and bake at 425 for 40 minutes.
I believe this would have come out even better had I included fresh baby peas, some diced carrot, and onion slices. But it was very good the way I made it. It had a rich gravy, thickend by the cornstarch, with great chicken and herb flavor. The noodles were well flavored as well, absorbing some of the chicken flavor from the gravy. All in all, it was an unqualified success.
Let me know if any of you has a similar, or better recipe, maybe adding some grated parmesan or something.
Seeeeeya; Goodweed of the North